Title: The Investment Principle: Estimating Hurdle Rates
1The Investment Principle Estimating Hurdle
Rates
- You cannot swing upon a rope that is attached
only to your own belt.
2First Principles
- Invest in projects that yield a return greater
than the minimum acceptable hurdle rate. - The hurdle rate should be higher for riskier
projects and reflect the financing mix used -
owners funds (equity) or borrowed money (debt) - Returns on projects should be measured based on
cash flows generated and the timing of these cash
flows they should also consider both positive
and negative side effects of these projects. - Choose a financing mix that minimizes the hurdle
rate and matches the assets being financed. - If there are not enough investments that earn the
hurdle rate, return the cash to stockholders. - The form of returns - dividends and stock
buybacks - will depend upon the stockholders
characteristics.
3Inputs required to use the CAPM -
- The capital asset pricing model yields the
following expected return - Expected Return Riskfree Rate Beta (Expected
Return on the Market Portfolio - Riskfree Rate) - To use the model we need three inputs
- The current risk-free rate
- (b) The expected market risk premium (the premium
expected for investing in risky assets (market
portfolio) over the riskless asset) - (c) The beta of the asset being analyzed.
4The Riskfree Rate and Time Horizon
- On a riskfree asset, the actual return is equal
to the expected return. Therefore, there is no
variance around the expected return. - For an investment to be riskfree, i.e., to have
an actual return be equal to the expected return,
two conditions have to be met - There has to be no default risk, which generally
implies that the security has to be issued by the
government. Note, however, that not all
governments can be viewed as default free. - There can be no uncertainty about reinvestment
rates, which implies that it is a zero coupon
security with the same maturity as the cash flow
being analyzed.
5Riskfree Rate in Practice
- The riskfree rate is the rate on a zero coupon
government bond matching the time horizon of the
cash flow being analyzed. - Theoretically, this translates into using
different riskfree rates for each cash flow - the
1 year zero coupon rate for the cash flow in
year 1, the 2-year zero coupon rate for the cash
flow in year 2 ... - Practically speaking, if there is substantial
uncertainty about expected cash flows, the
present value effect of using time varying
riskfree rates is small enough that it may not be
worth it.
6The Bottom Line on Riskfree Rates
- Using a long term government rate (even on a
coupon bond) as the riskfree rate on all of the
cash flows in a long term analysis will yield a
close approximation of the true value. - For short term analysis, it is entirely
appropriate to use a short term government
security rate as the riskfree rate. - The riskfree rate that you use in an analysis
should be in the same currency that your
cashflows are estimated in. - In other words, if your cashflows are in U.S.
dollars, your riskfree rate has to be in U.S.
dollars as well. - If your cash flows are in Euros, your riskfree
rate should be a Euro riskfree rate.
7What if there is no default-free entity?
- You could adjust the local currency government
borrowing rate by the estimated default spread on
the bond to arrive at a riskless local currency
rate. - The default spread on the government bond can be
estimated using the local currency ratings that
are available for many countries. - For instance, assume that the Mexican 10-year
peso bond has an interest rate of 8.85 and that
the local currency rating assigned to the Mexican
government is AA. If the default spread for AA
rated bonds is 0.7, the riskless nominal peso
rate is 8.15. - Alternatively, you can analyze Mexican companies
in U.S. dollars and use the U.S. treasury bond
rate as your riskfree rate or in real terms and
do all analysis without an inflation component.
8Measurement of the risk premium
- The risk premium is the premium that investors
demand for investing in an average risk
investment, relative to the riskfree rate. - As a general proposition, this premium should be
- greater than zero
- increase with the risk aversion of the investors
in that market - increase with the riskiness of the average risk
investment
9What is your risk premium?
- Assume that stocks are the only risky assets and
that you are offered two investment options - a riskless investment (say a Government
Security), on which you can make 5 - a mutual fund of all stocks, on which the
returns are uncertain - How much of an expected return would you demand
to shift your money from the riskless asset to
the mutual fund? - Less than 5
- Between 5 - 7
- Between 7 - 9
- Between 9 - 11
- Between 11- 13
- More than 13
- Check your premium against the survey premium on
my web site.
10Risk Aversion and Risk Premiums
- If this were the entire market, the risk premium
would be a weighted average of the risk premiums
demanded by each and every investor. - The weights will be determined by the magnitude
of wealth that each investor has. Thus, Warren
Buffets risk aversion counts more towards
determining the equilibrium premium than yours
and mine. - As investors become more risk averse, you would
expect the equilibrium premium to increase.
11Risk Premiums do change..
- Go back to the previous example. Assume now that
you are making the same choice but that you are
making it in the aftermath of a stock market
crash (it has dropped 25 in the last month).
Would you change your answer? - I would demand a larger premium
- I would demand a smaller premium
- I would demand the same premium
12Estimating Risk Premiums in Practice
- Survey investors on their desired risk premiums
and use the average premium from these surveys. - Assume that the actual premium delivered over
long time periods is equal to the expected
premium - i.e., use historical data - Estimate the implied premium in todays asset
prices.
13The Survey Approach
- Surveying all investors in a market place is
impractical. - However, you can survey a few investors
(especially the larger investors) and use these
results. In practice, this translates into
surveys of money managers expectations of
expected returns on stocks over the next year. - The limitations of this approach are
- there are no constraints on reasonability (the
survey could produce negative risk premiums or
risk premiums of 50) - they are extremely volatile
- they tend to be short term even the longest
surveys do not go beyond one year
14The Historical Premium Approach
- This is the default approach used by most to
arrive at the premium to use in the model - In most cases, this approach does the following
- it defines a time period for the estimation
(1926-Present, 1962-Present....) - it calculates average returns on a stock index
during the period - it calculates average returns on a riskless
security over the period - it calculates the difference between the two
- and uses it as a premium looking forward
- The limitations of this approach are
- it assumes that the risk aversion of investors
has not changed in a systematic way across time.
(The risk aversion may change from year to year,
but it reverts back to historical averages) - it assumes that the riskiness of the risky
portfolio (stock index) has not changed in a
systematic way across time.
15Historical Average Premiums for the United States
- Arithmetic average Geometric Average
- Stocks - Stocks - Stocks - Stocks -
- Historical Period T.Bills T.Bonds T.Bills T.Bonds
- 1928-2005 7.83 5.95 6.47 4.80
- 1964-2005 5.52 4.29 4.08 3.21
- 1994-2005 8.80 7.07 5.15 3.76
- What is the right premium?
- Go back as far as you can. Otherwise, the
standard error in the estimate will be large. ( - Be consistent in your use of a riskfree rate.
- Use arithmetic premiums for one-year estimates of
costs of equity and geometric premiums for
estimates of long term costs of equity. - Data Source Check out the returns by year and
estimate your own historical premiums by going to
updated data on my web site.
16What about historical premiums for other markets?
- Historical data for markets outside the United
States is available for much shorter time
periods. The problem is even greater in emerging
markets. - The historical premiums that emerge from this
data reflects this and there is much greater
error associated with the estimates of the
premiums.
17One solution Look at a countrys bond rating and
default spreads as a start
- Ratings agencies such as SP and Moodys assign
ratings to countries that reflect their
assessment of the default risk of these
countries. These ratings reflect the political
and economic stability of these countries and
thus provide a useful measure of country risk. In
September 2004, for instance, Brazil had a
country rating of B2. - If a country issues bonds denominated in a
different currency (say dollars or euros), you
can also see how the bond market views the risk
in that country. In September 2004, Brazil had
dollar denominated C-Bonds, trading at an
interest rate of 10.01. The US treasury bond
rate that day was 4, yielding a default spread
of 6.01 for Brazil. - Many analysts add this default spread to the US
risk premium to come up with a risk premium for a
country. Using this approach would yield a risk
premium of 10.83 for Brazil, if we use 4.82 as
the premium for the US.
18Beyond the default spread
- Country ratings measure default risk. While
default risk premiums and equity risk premiums
are highly correlated, one would expect equity
spreads to be higher than debt spreads. If we can
compute how much more risky the equity market is,
relative to the bond market, we could use this
information. For example, - Standard Deviation in Bovespa (Equity) 36
- Standard Deviation in Brazil C-Bond 28.2
- Default spread on C-Bond 6.01
- Country Risk Premium for Brazil 6.01
(36/28.2) 7.67 - Note that this is on top of the premium you
estimate for a mature market. Thus, if you assume
that the risk premium in the US is 4.82
(1998-2003 average), the risk premium for Brazil
would be 12.49.
19An alternate view of ERP Watch what I pay, not
what I say..
20Solving for the implied premium
- If we know what investors paid for equities at
the beginning of 2006 and we can estimate the
expected cash flows from equities, we can solve
for the rate of return that they expect to make
(IRR) - Expected Return on Stocks 8.47
- Implied Equity Risk Premium Expected Return on
Stocks - T.Bond Rate 8.47 - 4.39 4.08
21Implied Premiums in the US
226 Application Test A Market Risk Premium
- Based upon our discussion of historical risk
premiums so far, the risk premium looking forward
should be - About 7.8, which is what the arithmetic average
premium has been since 1928, for stocks over
T.Bills - About 4.8, which is the geometric average
premium since 1928, for stocks over T.Bonds - About 4, which is the implied premium in the
stock market today
23Estimating Beta
- The standard procedure for estimating betas is to
regress stock returns (Rj) against market returns
(Rm) - - Rj a b Rm
- where a is the intercept and b is the slope of
the regression. - The slope of the regression corresponds to the
beta of the stock, and measures the riskiness of
the stock.
24Estimating Performance
- The intercept of the regression provides a simple
measure of performance during the period of the
regression, relative to the capital asset pricing
model. - Rj Rf b (Rm - Rf)
- Rf (1-b) b Rm ........... Capital Asset
Pricing Model - Rj a b Rm ........... Regression Equation
- If
- a gt Rf (1-b) .... Stock did better than expected
during regression period - a Rf (1-b) .... Stock did as well as expected
during regression period - a lt Rf (1-b) .... Stock did worse than expected
during regression period - The difference between the intercept and Rf (1-b)
is Jensen's alpha. If it is positive, your stock
did perform better than expected during the
period of the regression.
25Firm Specific and Market Risk
- The R squared (R2) of the regression provides an
estimate of the proportion of the risk (variance)
of a firm that can be attributed to market risk - The balance (1 - R2) can be attributed to firm
specific risk.
26Setting up for the Estimation
- Decide on an estimation period
- Services use periods ranging from 2 to 5 years
for the regression - Longer estimation period provides more data, but
firms change. - Shorter periods can be affected more easily by
significant firm-specific event that occurred
during the period (Example ITT for 1995-1997) - Decide on a return interval - daily, weekly,
monthly - Shorter intervals yield more observations, but
suffer from more noise. - Noise is created by stocks not trading and biases
all betas towards one. - Estimate returns (including dividends) on stock
- Return (PriceEnd - PriceBeginning
DividendsPeriod)/ PriceBeginning - Included dividends only in ex-dividend month
- Choose a market index, and estimate returns
(inclusive of dividends) on the index for each
interval for the period.
27Choosing the Parameters Disney
- Period used 5 years
- Return Interval Monthly
- Market Index SP 500 Index.
- For instance, to calculate returns on Disney in
December 1999, - Price for Disney at end of November 1999
27.88 - Price for Disney at end of December 1999
29.25 - Dividends during month 0.21 (It was an
ex-dividend month) - Return (29.25 - 27.88 0.21)/27.88 5.69
- To estimate returns on the index in the same
month - Index level (including dividends) at end of
November 1999 1388.91 - Index level (including dividends) at end of
December 1999 1469.25 - Return (1469.25 - 1388.91)/ 1388.91 5.78
28Disneys Historical Beta
29The Regression Output
- Using monthly returns from 1999 to 2003, we ran a
regression of returns on Disney stock against the
SP 500. The output is below - ReturnsDisney 0.0467 1.01 ReturnsS P 500
(R squared 29) - (0.20)
30Analyzing Disneys Performance
- Intercept 0.0467
- This is an intercept based on monthly returns.
Thus, it has to be compared to a monthly riskfree
rate. - Between 1999 and 2003,
- Monthly Riskfree Rate 0.313 (based upon
average T.Bill rate 99-03) - Riskfree Rate (1-Beta) 0.313 (1-1.01)
-..0032 - The Comparison is then between
- Intercept versus Riskfree Rate (1 - Beta)
- 0.0467 versus 0.313(1-1.01)-0.0032
- Jensens Alpha 0.0467 -(-0.0032) 0.05
- Disney did 0.05 better than expected, per month,
between 1999 and 2003. - Annualized, Disneys annual excess return
(1.0005)12-1 0.60
31More on Jensens Alpha
- If you did this analysis on every stock listed on
an exchange, what would the average Jensens
alpha be across all stocks? - Depend upon whether the market went up or down
during the period - Should be zero
- Should be greater than zero, because stocks tend
to go up more often than down
32A positive Jensens alpha Who is responsible?
- Disney has a positive Jensens alpha of 0.60 a
year between 1999 and 2003. This can be viewed as
a sign that management in the firm did a good
job, managing the firm during the period. - True
- False
33Estimating Disneys Beta
- Slope of the Regression of 1.01 is the beta
- Regression parameters are always estimated with
error. The error is captured in the standard
error of the beta estimate, which in the case of
Disney is 0.20. - Assume that I asked you what Disneys true beta
is, after this regression. - What is your best point estimate?
- What range would you give me, with 67
confidence? - What range would you give me, with 95
confidence?
34The Dirty Secret of Standard Error
Distribution of Standard Errors Beta Estimates
for U.S. stocks
1600
1400
1200
1000
800
Number of Firms
600
400
200
0
lt.10
.10 - .20
.20 - .30
.30 - .40
.40 -.50
.50 - .75
gt .75
Standard Error in Beta Estimate
35Breaking down Disneys Risk
- R Squared 29
- This implies that
- 29 of the risk at Disney comes from market
sources - 71, therefore, comes from firm-specific sources
- The firm-specific risk is diversifiable and will
not be rewarded
36The Relevance of R Squared
- You are a diversified investor trying to decide
whether you should invest in Disney or Amgen.
They both have betas of 1.01, but Disney has an R
Squared of 29 while Amgens R squared of only
14.5. Which one would you invest in? - Amgen, because it has the lower R squared
- Disney, because it has the higher R squared
- You would be indifferent
- Would your answer be different if you were an
undiversified investor?
37Beta Estimation Using a Service (Bloomberg)
38Estimating Expected Returns for Disney in
September 2004
- Inputs to the expected return calculation
- Disneys Beta 1.01
- Riskfree Rate 4.00 (U.S. ten-year T.Bond rate)
- Risk Premium 4.82 (Approximate historical
premium 1928-2003) - Expected Return Riskfree Rate Beta (Risk
Premium) - 4.00 1.01(4.82) 8.87
39Use to a Potential Investor in Disney
- As a potential investor in Disney, what does this
expected return of 8.87 tell you? - This is the return that I can expect to make in
the long term on Disney, if the stock is
correctly priced and the CAPM is the right model
for risk, - This is the return that I need to make on Disney
in the long term to break even on my investment
in the stock - Both
- Assume now that you are an active investor and
that your research suggests that an investment in
Disney will yield 12.5 a year for the next 5
years. Based upon the expected return of 8.87,
you would - Buy the stock
- Sell the stock
40How managers use this expected return
- Managers at Disney
- need to make at least 8.87 as a return for their
equity investors to break even. - this is the hurdle rate for projects, when the
investment is analyzed from an equity standpoint - In other words, Disneys cost of equity is
8.87. - What is the cost of not delivering this cost of
equity?
416 Application Test Analyzing the Risk Regression
- Using your Bloomberg risk and return print out,
answer the following questions - How well or badly did your stock do, relative to
the market, during the period of the regression? - Intercept - (Riskfree Rate/n) (1- Beta)
Jensens Alpha - Where n is the number of return periods in a year
(12 if monthly 52 if weekly) - What proportion of the risk in your stock is
attributable to the market? What proportion is
firm-specific? - What is the historical estimate of beta for your
stock? What is the range on this estimate with
67 probability? With 95 probability? - Based upon this beta, what is your estimate of
the required return on this stock? - Riskless Rate Beta Risk Premium
42A Quick Test
- You are advising a very risky software firm on
the right cost of equity to use in project
analysis. You estimate a beta of 3.0 for the firm
and come up with a cost of equity of 18.46. The
CFO of the firm is concerned about the high cost
of equity and wants to know whether there is
anything he can do to lower his beta. - How do you bring your beta down?
- Should you focus your attention on bringing your
beta down? - Yes
- No
43Disneys Beta Calculation A look back at
1997-2002
Jensens alpha -0.39 - 0.30 (1 - 0.94)
-0.41 Annualized (1-.0041)12-1 -4.79
44Beta Estimation and Index Choice Deutsche Bank
45A Few Questions
- The R squared for Deutsche Bank is very high
(62), at least relative to U.S. firms. Why is
that? - The beta for Deutsche Bank is 1.04.
- Is this an appropriate measure of risk?
- If not, why not?
- If you were an investor in primarily U.S. stocks,
would this be an appropriate measure of risk?
46Deutsche Bank Alternate views of Risk
47Aracruzs Beta?
48Beta Exploring Fundamentals
49Determinant 1 Product Type
- Industry Effects The beta value for a firm
depends upon the sensitivity of the demand for
its products and services and of its costs to
macroeconomic factors that affect the overall
market. - Cyclical companies have higher betas than
non-cyclical firms - Firms which sell more discretionary products will
have higher betas than firms that sell less
discretionary products
50A Simple Test
- Phone service is close to being non-discretionary
in the United States and Western Europe. However,
in much of Asia and Latin America, there are
large segments of the population for which phone
service is a luxur. Given our discussion of
discretionary and non-discretionary products,
which of the following conclusions would you be
willing to draw - Emerging market telecom companies should have
higher betas than developed market telecom
companies. - Developed market telecom companies should have
higher betas than emerging market telecom
companies - The two groups of companies should have similar
betas
51Determinant 2 Operating Leverage Effects
- Operating leverage refers to the proportion of
the total costs of the firm that are fixed. - Other things remaining equal, higher operating
leverage results in greater earnings variability
which in turn results in higher betas.
52Measures of Operating Leverage
- Fixed Costs Measure Fixed Costs / Variable
Costs - This measures the relationship between fixed and
variable costs. The higher the proportion, the
higher the operating leverage. - EBIT Variability Measure Change in EBIT /
Change in Revenues - This measures how quickly the earnings before
interest and taxes changes as revenue changes.
The higher this number, the greater the operating
leverage.
53Disneys Operating Leverage 1987- 2003
54Reading Disneys Operating Leverage
- Operating Leverage Change in EBIT/ Change
in Sales - 10.09 / 15.83 0.64
- This is lower than the operating leverage for
other entertainment firms, which we computed to
be 1.12. This would suggest that Disney has lower
fixed costs than its competitors. - The acquisition of Capital Cities by Disney in
1996 may be skewing the operating leverage.
Looking at the changes since then - Operating Leverage1996-03 4.42/11.73 0.38
- Looks like Disneys operating leverage has
decreased since 1996.
55A Test
- Assume that you are comparing a European
automobile manufacturing firm with a U.S.
automobile firm. European firms are generally
much more constrained in terms of laying off
employees, if they get into financial trouble.
What implications does this have for betas, if
they are estimated relative to a common index? - European firms will have much higher betas than
U.S. firms - European firms will have similar betas to U.S.
firms - European firms will have much lower betas than
U.S. firms
56Determinant 3 Financial Leverage
- As firms borrow, they create fixed costs
(interest payments) that make their earnings to
equity investors more volatile. - This increased earnings volatility which
increases the equity beta
57Equity Betas and Leverage
- The beta of equity alone can be written as a
function of the unlevered beta and the
debt-equity ratio - ?L ?u (1 ((1-t)D/E))
- where
- ?L Levered or Equity Beta
- ?u Unlevered Beta
- t Corporate marginal tax rate
- D Market Value of Debt
- E Market Value of Equity
58Effects of leverage on betas Disney
- The regression beta for Disney is 1.01. This beta
is a levered beta (because it is based on stock
prices, which reflect leverage) and the leverage
implicit in the beta estimate is the average
market debt equity ratio during the period of the
regression (1999 to 2003) - The average debt equity ratio during this period
was 27.5. - The unlevered beta for Disney can then be
estimated (using a marginal tax rate of 37.3) - Current Beta / (1 (1 - tax rate) (Average
Debt/Equity)) - 1.01 / (1 (1 - 0.373)) (0.275) 0.8615
59Disney Beta and Leverage
- Debt to Capital Debt/Equity Ratio Beta Effect of
Leverage - 0.00 0.00 0.86 0.00
- 10.00 11.11 0.92 0.06
- 20.00 25.00 1.00 0.14
- 30.00 42.86 1.09 0.23
- 40.00 66.67 1.22 0.36
- 50.00 100.00 1.40 0.54
- 60.00 150.00 1.67 0.81
- 70.00 233.33 2.12 1.26
- 80.00 400.00 3.02 2.16
- 90.00 900.00 5.72 4.86
60Betas are weighted Averages
- The beta of a portfolio is always the
market-value weighted average of the betas of the
individual investments in that portfolio. - Thus,
- the beta of a mutual fund is the weighted average
of the betas of the stocks and other investment
in that portfolio - the beta of a firm after a merger is the
market-value weighted average of the betas of the
companies involved in the merger.
61The Disney/Cap Cities Merger Pre-Merger
- Disney
- Beta 1.15
- Debt 3,186 million Equity 31,100
million Firm 34,286 - D/E 0.10
- ABC
- Beta 0.95
- Debt 615 million Equity 18,500
million Firm 19,115 - D/E 0.03
62Disney Cap Cities Beta Estimation Step 1
- Calculate the unlevered betas for both firms
- Disneys unlevered beta 1.15/(10.640.10)
1.08 - Cap Cities unlevered beta 0.95/(10.640.03)
0.93 - Calculate the unlevered beta for the combined
firm - Unlevered Beta for combined firm
- 1.08 (34286/53401) 0.93 (19115/53401)
- 1.026
- Remember to calculate the weights using the firm
values of the two firms
63Disney Cap Cities Beta Estimation Step 2
- If Disney had used all equity to buy Cap Cities
- Debt 615 3,186 3,801 million
- Equity 18,500 31,100 49,600
- D/E Ratio 3,801/49600 7.66
- New Beta 1.026 (1 0.64 (.0766)) 1.08
- Since Disney borrowed 10 billion to buy Cap
Cities/ABC - Debt 615 3,186 10,000 13,801
million - Equity 39,600
- D/E Ratio 13,801/39600 34.82
- New Beta 1.026 (1 0.64 (.3482)) 1.25
64Firm Betas versus divisional Betas
- Firm Betas as weighted averages The beta of a
firm is the weighted average of the betas of its
individual projects. - At a broader level of aggregation, the beta of a
firm is the weighted average of the betas of its
individual division.
65Bottom-up versus Top-down Beta
- The top-down beta for a firm comes from a
regression - The bottom up beta can be estimated by doing the
following - Find out the businesses that a firm operates in
- Find the unlevered betas of other firms in these
businesses - Take a weighted (by sales or operating income)
average of these unlevered betas - Lever up using the firms debt/equity ratio
- The bottom up beta is a better estimate than the
top down beta for the following reasons - The standard error of the beta estimate will be
much lower - The betas can reflect the current (and even
expected future) mix of businesses that the firm
is in rather than the historical mix
66Disneys business breakdown
67Disneys bottom up beta
68Disneys Cost of Equity
Riskfree Rate 4 Risk Premium 4.82
69 Discussion Issue
- If you were the chief financial officer of
Disney, what cost of equity would you use in
capital budgeting in the different divisions? - The cost of equity for Disney as a company
- The cost of equity for each of Disneys divisions?
70Estimating Aracruzs Bottom Up Beta
- Comparables No Avg ? D/E ?Unlev Cash/Val ?Correct
- Emerging Markets 111 0.6895 38.33 0.5469 6.58 0.
585 - US 34 0.7927 83.57 0.5137 2.09 0.525
- Global 288 0.6333 38.88 0.5024 6.54 0.538
- Aracruz has a cash balance which was 7.07 of the
market value - Unlevered Beta for Aracruz (0.9293) (0.585)
(0.0707) (0) 0.5440 - Using Aracruzs gross D/E ratio of 44.59 a tax
rate of 34 - Levered Beta for Aracruz 0.5440 (1 (1-.34)
(.4459)) 0.7040 - The levered beta for just the paper business can
also be computed - Levered Beta for paper business 0.585 (1
(1-.34) (.4459))) 0.7576
71Aracruz Cost of Equity Calculation
- We will use a risk premium of 12.49 in computing
the cost of equity, composed of the U.S.
historical risk premium (4.82 from 1928-2003
time period) and the Brazil country risk premium
of 7.67 (estimated earlier in the package) - U.S. Cost of Equity
- Cost of Equity 10-yr T.Bond rate Beta Risk
Premium - 4 0.7040 (12.49) 12.79
- Real Cost of Equity
- Cost of Equity 10-yr Inflation-indexed T.Bond
rate Beta Risk Premium - 2 0.7040 (12.49) 10.79
- Nominal BR Cost of Equity
- Cost of Equity
- 1.1279 (1.08/1.02) -1 .1943 or 19.43
72Estimating Bottom-up Beta Deutsche Bank
- Deutsche Bank is in two different segments of
business - commercial banking and investment
banking. - To estimate its commercial banking beta, we will
use the average beta of commercial banks in
Germany. - To estimate the investment banking beta, we will
use the average bet of investment banks in the
U.S and U.K. - To estimate the cost of equity in Euros, we will
use the German 10-year bond rate of 4.05 as the
riskfree rate and the US historical risk premium
(4.82) as our proxy for a mature market premium. - Business Beta Cost of Equity Weights
- Commercial Banking 0.7345 7.59 69.03
- Investment Banking 1.5167 11.36 30.97
- Deutsche Bank 8.76
73Estimating Betas for Non-Traded Assets
- The conventional approaches of estimating betas
from regressions do not work for assets that are
not traded. - There are two ways in which betas can be
estimated for non-traded assets - using comparable firms
- using accounting earnings
74Using comparable firms to estimate beta for
Bookscape
- Assume that you are trying to estimate the beta
for a independent bookstore in New York City. - Firm Beta Debt Equity Cash
- Books-A-Million 0.532 45 45 5
- Borders Group 0.844 182 1,430 269
- Barnes Noble 0.885 300 1,606 268
- Courier Corp 0.815 1 285 6
- Info Holdings 0.883 2 371 54
- John Wiley Son 0.636 235 1,662 33
- Scholastic Corp 0.744 549 1,063 11
- Sector 0.7627 1,314 6,462 645
- Unlevered Beta 0.7627/(1(1-.35)(1314/6462))
0.6737 - Corrected for Cash 0.6737 / (1
645/(13146462)) 0.7346
75Estimating Bookscape Levered Beta and Cost of
Equity
- Since the debt/equity ratios used are market debt
equity ratios, and the only debt equity ratio we
can compute for Bookscape is a book value debt
equity ratio, we have assumed that Bookscape is
close to the industry average debt to equity
ratio of 20.33. - Using a marginal tax rate of 40 (based upon
personal income tax rates) for Bookscape, we get
a levered beta of 0.82. - Levered beta for Bookscape 0.7346 (1 (1-.40)
(.2033)) 0.82 - Using a riskfree rate of 4 (US treasury bond
rate) and a historical risk premium of 4.82 - Cost of Equity 4 0.82 (4.82) 7.95
76Using Accounting Earnings to Estimate Beta
77The Accounting Beta for Bookscape
- Regressing the changes in profits at Bookscape
against changes in profits for the SP 500 yields
the following - Bookscape Earnings Change 0.1003 0.7329 (S
P 500 Earnings Change) - Based upon this regression, the beta for
Bookscapes equity is 0.73. - Using operating earnings for both the firm and
the SP 500 should yield the equivalent of an
unlevered beta. - The cost of equity based upon the accounting beta
is - Cost of equity 4 0.73 (4.82) 7.52
78Is Beta an Adequate Measure of Risk for a Private
Firm?
- Beta measures the risk added on to a diversified
portfolio. The owners of most private firms are
not diversified. Therefore, using beta to arrive
at a cost of equity for a private firm will - Under estimate the cost of equity for the private
firm - Over estimate the cost of equity for the private
firm - Could under or over estimate the cost of equity
for the private firm
79Total Risk versus Market Risk
- Adjust the beta to reflect total risk rather than
market risk. This adjustment is a relatively
simple one, since the R squared of the regression
measures the proportion of the risk that is
market risk. - Total Beta Market Beta / Correlation of the
sector with the market - In the Bookscape example, where the market beta
is 0.82 and the average R-squared of the
comparable publicly traded firms is 16, - Total Cost of Equity 4 2.06 (4.82) 13.93
806 Application Test Estimating a Bottom-up Beta
- Based upon the business or businesses that your
firm is in right now, and its current financial
leverage, estimate the bottom-up unlevered beta
for your firm. - Data Source You can get a listing of unlevered
betas by industry on my web site by going to
updated data.
81From Cost of Equity to Cost of Capital
- The cost of capital is a composite cost to the
firm of raising financing to fund its projects. - In addition to equity, firms can raise capital
from debt
82What is debt?
- General Rule Debt generally has the following
characteristics - Commitment to make fixed payments in the future
- The fixed payments are tax deductible
- Failure to make the payments can lead to either
default or loss of control of the firm to the
party to whom payments are due. - As a consequence, debt should include
- Any interest-bearing liability, whether short
term or long term. - Any lease obligation, whether operating or
capital.
83Estimating the Cost of Debt
- If the firm has bonds outstanding, and the bonds
are traded, the yield to maturity on a long-term,
straight (no special features) bond can be used
as the interest rate. - If the firm is rated, use the rating and a
typical default spread on bonds with that rating
to estimate the cost of debt. - If the firm is not rated,
- and it has recently borrowed long term from a
bank, use the interest rate on the borrowing or - estimate a synthetic rating for the company, and
use the synthetic rating to arrive at a default
spread and a cost of debt - The cost of debt has to be estimated in the same
currency as the cost of equity and the cash flows
in the valuation.
84Estimating Synthetic Ratings
- The rating for a firm can be estimated using the
financial characteristics of the firm. In its
simplest form, the rating can be estimated from
the interest coverage ratio - Interest Coverage Ratio EBIT / Interest
Expenses - In 2003, Bookscape had operating income of 2
million and interest expenses of 500,000. The
resulting interest coverage ratio is 4.00. - Interest coverage ratio 2,000,000/500,000
4.00 - In 2003, Disney had operating income of 2,805
million and modified interest expenses of 758
million - Interest coverage ratio 2805/758 3.70
- In 2003, Aracruz had operating income of 887
million BR and interest expenses of 339 million
BR - Interest coverage ratio 887/339 2.62
85Interest Coverage Ratios, Ratings and Default
Spreads Small Companies
- Interest Coverage Ratio Rating Typical default
spread - gt 12.5 AAA 0.35
- 9.50 - 12.50 AA 0.50
- 7.50 9.50 A 0.70
- 6.00 7.50 A 0.85
- 4.50 6.00 A- 1.00
- 4.00 4.50 BBB 1.50
- 3.50 - 4.00 BB 2.00
- 3.00 3.50 BB 2.50
- 2.50 3.00 B 3.25
- 2.00 - 2.50 B 4.00
- 1.50 2.00 B- 6.00
- 1.25 1.50 CCC 8.00
- 0.80 1.25 CC 10.00
- 0.50 0.80 C 12.00
- lt 0.65 D 20.00
Bookscape
86Interest Coverage Ratios, Ratings and Default
Spreads Large Companies
- Interest Coverage Ratio Rating Default Spread
- gt8.5 AAA 0.35
- 6.50-8.50 AA 0.50
- 5.5-6.5 A 0.70
- 4.25-5.5 A 0.85
- 3-4.25 A- 1.00
- 2.5-3 BBB 1.50
- 2.25-2.5 BB 2.00
- 2-2.25 BB 2.50
- 1.75-2 B 3.25
- 1.5-1.75 B 4.00
- 1.25-1.5 B- 6.00
- 0.8-1.25 CCC 8.00
- 0.65-0.80 CC 10.00
- 0.2-0.65 C 12.00
- lt0.2 D 20.00
Disney
Aracruz
87Synthetic versus Actual Ratings Disney and
Aracruz
- Disney and Aracruz are rated companies and their
actual ratings are different from the synthetic
rating. - Disneys synthetic rating is A-, whereas its
actual rating is BBB. The difference can be
attributed to any of the following - Synthetic ratings reflect only the interest
coverage ratio whereas actual ratings incorporate
all of the other ratios and qualitative factors - Synthetic ratings do not allow for sector-wide
biases in ratings - Synthetic rating was based on 2003 operating
income whereas actual rating reflects normalized
earnings - Aracruzs synthetic rating is BBB, but its actual
rating for dollar debt is B. The biggest factor
behind the difference is the presence of country
risk. In fact, Aracruz has a local currency
rating of BBB-, closer to the synthetic rating.
88Estimating Cost of Debt
- For Bookscape, we will use the synthetic rating
to estimate the cost of debt - Rating based on interest coverage ratio BBB
- Default Spread based upon rating 1.50
- Pre-tax cost of debt Riskfree Rate Default
Spread 4 1.50 5.50 - After-tax cost of debt Pre-tax cost of debt (1-
tax rate) 5.50 (1-.40) 3.30 - For the three publicly traded firms in our
sample, we will use the actual bond ratings to
estimate the costs of debt - SP Rating Riskfree Rate Default Cost of Tax
After-tax Spread Debt Rate Cost of Debt - Disney BBB 4 () 1.25 5.25 37.3 3.29
- Deutsche Bank AA- 4.05 (Eu) 1.00 5.05 38 3.13
- Aracruz B 4 () 3.25 7.25 34 4.79
896 Application Test Estimating a Cost of Debt
- Based upon your firms current earnings before
interest and taxes, its interest expenses,
estimate - An interest coverage ratio for your firm
- A synthetic rating for your firm (use the tables
from prior pages) - A pre-tax cost of debt for your firm
- An after-tax cost of debt for your firm
90Costs of Hybrids
- Preferred stock shares some of the
characteristics of debt - the preferred dividend
is pre-specified at the time of the issue and is
paid out before common dividend -- and some of
the characteristics of equity - the payments of
preferred dividend are not tax deductible. If
preferred stock is viewed as perpetual, the cost
of preferred stock can be written as follows - kps Preferred Dividend per share/ Market Price
per preferred share - Convertible debt is part debt (the bond part) and
part equity (the conversion option). It is best
to break it up into its component parts and
eliminate it from the mix altogether.
91Weights for Cost of Capital Calculation
- The weights used in the cost of capital
computation should be market values. - There are three specious arguments used against
market value - Book value is more reliable than market value
because it is not as volatile While it is true
that book value does not change as much as market
value, this is more a reflection of weakness than
strength - Using book value rather than market value is a
more conservative approach to estimating debt
ratios For most companies, using book values
will yield a lower cost of capital than using
market value weights. - Since accounting returns are computed based upon
book value, consistency requires the use of book
value in computing cost of capital While it may
seem consistent to use book values for both
accounting return and cost of capital
calculations, it does not make economic sense.
92Estimating Market Value Weights
- Market Value of Equity should include the
following - Market Value of Shares outstanding
- Market Value of Warrants outstanding
- Market Value of Conversion Option in Convertible
Bonds - Market Value of Debt is more difficult to
estimate because few firms have only publicly
traded debt. There are two solutions - Assume book value of debt is equal to market
value - Estimate the market value of debt from the book
value - For Disney, with book value of 13,100 million,
interest expenses of 666 million, a current
cost of borrowing of 5.25 and an weighted
average maturity of 11.53 years. -
- Estimated MV of Disney Debt
PV of Annuity, 5.25, 11.53 yrs
93Converting Operating Leases to Debt
- The debt value of operating leases is the
present value of the lease payments, at a rate
that reflects their risk. - In general, this rate will be close to or equal
to the rate at which the company can borrow.
94Operating Leases at Disney
- The pre-tax cost of debt at Disney is 5.25
- Year Commitment Present Value
- 1 271.00 257.48
- 2 242.00 218.46
- 3 221.00 189.55
- 4 208.00 169.50
- 5 275.00 212.92
- 6 9 258.25 704.93
- Debt Value of leases 1,752.85
- Debt outstanding at Disney
- MV of Interest bearing Debt PV of Operating
Leases - 12,915 1,753 14,668 million
956 Application Test Estimating Market Value
- Estimate the
- Market value of equity at your firm and Book
Value of equity - Market value of debt and book value of debt (If
you cannot find the average maturity of your
debt, use 3 years) Remember to capitalize the
value of operating leases and add them on to both
the book value and the market value of debt. - Estimate the
- Weights for equity and debt based upon market
value - Weights for equity and debt based upon book value
96Current Cost of Capital Disney
- Equity
- Cost of Equity Riskfree rate Beta Risk
Premium 4 1.25 (4.82) 10.00 - Market Value of Equity 55.101 Billion
- Equity/(DebtEquity ) 79
- Debt
- After-tax Cost of debt (Riskfree rate Default
Spread) (1-t) - (41.25) (1-.373) 3.29
- Market Value of Debt 14.668 Billion
- Debt/(Debt Equity) 21
- Cost of Capital 10.00(.79)3.29(.21) 8.59
55.101(55.10114.668)
97Disneys Divisional Costs of Capital
- Business Cost of After-tax E/(DE) D/(DE) Cost
of capital - Equity cost of debt
- Media Networks 10.10 3.29 78.98 21.02 8.67
- Parks and Resorts 9.12 3.29 78.98 21.02 7.90
- Studio Entertainment 10.43 3.29 78.98 21.02 8.
93 - Consumer Products 10.39 3.29 78.98 21.02 8.89
- Disney 10.00 3.29 78.98 21.02 8.59
98Aracruzs Cost of Capital
99Bookscape Cost of Capital
- Beta Cost of After-tax D/(DE) Cost of
Equity cost of debt Capital - Market Beta 0.82 7.97 3.30 16.90 7.18
- Total Beta 2.06 13.93 3.30 16.90 12.14
1006 Application Test Estimating Cost of Capital
- Using the bottom-up unlevered beta that you
computed for your firm, and the values of debt
and equity you have estimated for your firm,
estimate a bottom-up levered beta and cost of
equity for your firm. - Based upon the costs of equity and debt that you
have estimated, and the weights for each,
estimate the cost of capital for your firm. - How different would your cost of capital have
been, if you used book value weights?
101Choosing a Hurdle Rate
- Either the cost of equity or the cost of capital
can be used as a hurdle rate, depending upon
whether the returns measured are to equity
investors or to all claimholders on the firm
(capital) - If returns are measured to equity investors, the
appropriate hurdle rate is the cost of equity. - If returns are measured to capital (or the firm),
the appropriate hurdle rate is the cost of
capital.
102Back to First Principles
- Invest in projects that yield a return greater
than the minimum acceptable hurdle rate. - The hurdle rate should be higher for riskier
projects and reflect the financing mix used -
owners funds (equity) or borrowed money (debt) - Returns on projects should be measured based on
cash flows generated and the timing of these cash
flows they should also consider both positive
and negative side effects of these projects. - Choose a financing mix that minimizes the hurdle
rate and matches the assets being financed. - If there are not enough investments that earn the
hurdle rate, return the cash to stockholders. - The form of returns - dividends and stock
buybacks - will depend upon the stockholders
characteristics.